St George's Garrison Church, Woolwich

St George's Garrison Church

View from Woolwich New Road
St George's Garrison Church
Location within the Royal Borough of Greenwich
Coordinates: 51°29′07″N 0°03′47″E / 51.4854°N 0.0631°E / 51.4854; 0.0631
OS grid reference TQ4334678286
Location Woolwich, London
Country UK
Denomination Church of England
Website stgeorgeswoolwich.org
History
Founder(s) Sidney Herbert, 1st Baron Herbert of Lea
Dedication Saint George
Architecture
Status Ruined church
Functional status War memorial
Heritage designation Grade II[1]
Designated 8 June 1973
Architect(s) Thomas Henry Wyatt (assisted by Matthew Digby Wyatt)
Style Romanesque-Byzantine Revival
Completed 1863
Closed 14 July 1944 (hit by bomb)

St George's Garrison Church is a ruined church in Woolwich in the Royal Borough of Greenwich, South East London. It was built in 1862-63 as a Church of England place of worship for the Woolwich Royal Artillery garrison. The church was hit by a V-1 flying bomb in 1944 and largely destroyed by fire. The restored church ruin with its canopied roof, its blue, red and yellow brick walls, its mosaics and a memorial garden is open to the public on Sundays.[2]

Location

The church was built on a triangular plot between Grand Depot Road (part of the A205 or South Circular Road) and Woolwich New Road, the entrance facing the parade ground of the Royal Artillery Barracks on Grand Depot Road. It is surrounded by a small park. On the southside of this park, where the two roads converge, stands the Second Boer War memorial. Both the church and the memorial are part of Woolwich Common conservation area.

History

Construction and embellishment

The first chapel for the Royal Artillery was part of the Royal Artillery Barracks complex at the north end of Woolwich Common. It was built in 1808 and after St George's was built it was converted into a theatre.[3]

Church interior in The Illustrated London News, 1863?

The idea for building a new garrison church came from Lord Sidney Herbert, the Secretary of State for War. The design of the church is similar to that of Thomas Henry Wyatt's parish church in Wilton, close to the Herbert family seat at Wilton House. Lord Herbert no doubt influenced the choice of style and the architect. In Woolwich, Thomas Henry Wyatt was assisted by his younger brother Matthew Digby Wyatt. The choice of the Wyatt brothers may also have been influenced by the fact that both the nearby Royal Artillery Barracks and the Royal Military Academy were designed by their forebear, James Wyatt. The Wyatt brothers designed a church in the Early Christian/Lombardic Romanesque style with Byzantine influences in the interior. The church was built by the Pimlico builders George Smith and Co.

Soon after completion, sitting capacity was increased from 1,550 to 1,700. Royal Artillery officers raised money for stained-glass windows and a church organ. Further embellishments consisted of mosaics (1902–03) and various memorials for deceased artillery men. South of the church an obelisk was erected to the memory of those who fell in the Second Boer War. [4]

Destruction, disrepair and conservation

On 14 July 1944 a V-1 flying bomb hit the church and caused a fire which destroyed the interior. The walls were still more or less intact and a temporary roof was erected. The church however was no longer needed, as the smaller chapel of St Michael and All Angels at the Royal Military Academy proved to be a suitable replacement.

Single capital

After the war the burned-out church suffered of further neglect and vandalism. In 1952 a rebuilding scheme by the architect Kenneth Lindy failed to gain sufficient support. In 1970 the upper parts of the walls were demolished and a corrugated canopy roof was erected to cover the remainder of the apse. Photos from the 1960s show that the apse windows were still in place then, as well as the upper parts of the culumns supporting the chancel arch and parts of the pulpit.[5] Also in 1970, a memorial garden was laid out in the roofless nave and aisles. In 1973 the building was listed for its architectural merits, especially its Victorian brick polychromy, as well as being part of an historic military ensemble and for demonstrating the impact of an aerial assault, reflected in its ruinous state.[1]

In 2011 ownership of the site was transferred from Defence Infrastructure Organisation to Heritage of London Trust Operations.[6] Shortly afterwards the Heritage Lottery Fund awarded a grant of just under £400,000, after which the ruins underwent much-needed conservation, including the building of a larger canopy roof over the east end of the church.[7] Since 2016 the church is run by a local group, the Woolwich Garrison Church Trust.[8] Further plans entail restoration of the pulpit and reinstallment of alabaster panels in the apse, which have been kept in storage.[9]

Architecture

Exterior

The church's exterior mainly follows the style of the Romanesque Revival. The use of polychromatic brick is typical of the mid-Victorian period. The narthex at the west end was inspired by Romanesque churches in Northern Italy. It consists of three porches with Bath stone columns and carved capitals. The two western columns of the central porch are quatrefoil-shaped and of Aberdeen granite. The original west façade had a rose window and was about four times higher than the remaining part of the narthex. The church was designed as a large basilica with a wide nave and narrow aisles, of which almost nothing remains. The church never had a tower, just a small belfry on the roof of the south aisle, looking slightly out of place. The lower parts of the apse and the east ends of the aisles are reasonably well-preserved.[1][10]

Interior

The interior of the church combines the neo-Romanesque and neo-Byzantine style. Most of it was lost in the fire or by neglect, but the lower parts of the chancel remain impressive. In the chancel various architectural details, mosaics (see below) and commemorative plaques are present, as well as the original altar and the lower part of the pulpit. Of the once impressive use of iron in the galleried interior almost nothing remains, except for two damaged corbels.[1][11]

Mosaics

The mosaics in the chancel were made in the Salviati workshop in Venice and installed by Burke & Co in 1902-03. The best-preserved panels show ancient Christian symbols such as vines with grapes, a peacock and a phoenix rising from the flames. A small mosaic of the Lamb of God was saved from the rubble and survives in one of the toilets in the north-west porch. The largest mosaic is a representation of Saint George and the Dragon in the apse. This is a slightly later addition of 1919-20, being part of a memorial to Royal Artillery men who had received the Victoria Cross.[1][12]

Memorial site

St George's has been a memorial church for more than a century. Apart from the Victoria Cross memorial mentioned above, several marble plaques commemorating artillery men survive in the apse. One of the columns supporting the arch that separates the chancel and the nave, also bears the names of men killed in military conflict up till the Second World War.

The memorial garden was first laid out as a lawn in 1970. On the south and north aisle walls copper plaques are attached with the names of Royal Artillery men killed in action or of natural causes after World War II. On 11 November 2015 a memorial was revealed by the Royal Borough of Greenwich marking Woolwich's history as a barracks town and commemorating the men and women who served or lived in Woolwich and gave their lives in the service of their country. Included are the names of the victims of the IRA-bombing of the King's Arms in 1974, and fusilier Lee Rigby, who was murdered in Woolwich in 2013.[13][14]

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Building ID 200358 on britishlistedbuildings.co.uk.
  2. Plan your visit on stgeorgeswoolwich.org.
  3. Saint & Guillery (2012), pp. 335-336.
  4. Saint & Guillery (2012), pp. 347-348.
  5. Compare photographs 358 and 359 in: Saint & Guillery (2012), p. 349.
  6. Heritage of London Trust Operations on stgeorgeswoolwich.org.
  7. Royal Garrison Church Woolwich gets new lease of life on hlf.org.uk, 24 October 2011.
  8. Woolwich Garrison Church Trust on stgeorgeswoolwich.org.
  9. Second Phase Conservation Works on stgeorgeswoolwich.org.
  10. Saint & Guillery (2012), p. 347.
  11. Saint & Guillery (2012), pp. 347-349.
  12. Saint & Guillery (2012), p. 348.
  13. Woolwich remembers on e-shootershill.co.uk, 10 November 2015.
  14. Saint & Guillery (2012), p. 350.
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